My mom is suffering with parkinsons related dementia. She has major hallucinations. Tonight we were watching tv together and she suddenly came towards me very agitated. She thought I was having relations with my dad (he is deceased). I couldn't calm her down so I left the room. She also thinks I'm stealing from her. I have to say it really makes it harder when the person you are caring for full time is not happy with you.
something else to distract the behavior. You see your mother but it's not the mother you used to know. Good luck to both of us.
This may be obvious, but have you spoken to her doctor? It seems that a lot of these doctors put them on the same regimen of pills for years without any review of them whatsoever - and if your mother sees a doctor on her own she will not be able to run down the list of them nor tell him/her how they are affecting her.
Maybe it's a good time for a review with the doctor and you and your mother to see if any of her medications are causing this frightening and adverse behaviour?
For me, walking away is the only solution. I found the more I attempted to calm her down, the more agitated she became. People suffering from dementia lose whatever common sense they once had.
But with a dementia patient it is different so the strategy changes, divert them, distract them, change the subject and don't take it personally. I know how hard that is to do, believe me!
Have a good day all!
I think sometimes, but of course not always, dementia brings out old feelings and they are acted upon, which i believe happened to my dad. I never thought my dad's mind was "gone". It just appeared to me that his mind was locked up. He bristled at my mother's touch or words but always smiled and felt content with me. All I know is dementia is one of the cruelest diseases and it breaks my heart to hear the word.
Hang in there. Know you are not alone and that others can relate to your pain. I know how devastating it can be.
Since they can't say it, we need to say it for each other!! Thank you for all you have done to help her. Thank you for caring. Thank you for your hard work and dedication. Thank you for being a good daughter! Thank you for being you. Thank you for all those unseen and selfless things you do without even thinking about it anymore. Thank you.
They talk about us being the "sandwich" generation - well this is one sandwich that I really never wanted to be part of and I'm sure that none of us expected our lives to go this way!
I hope that most of you believe in God, for He is the only One who has kept me going day by day. Without that faith I don't know where I would be at this point. How many of you, like myself, are doing this without the support of the other parent, your own spouse, or your siblings? And how many of you are being judged and criticized by the self-righteous in your family or community for giving up a major part of your lives to caregiving? I, for one, am so tired of hearing what I should and shouldn't be doing, by people who have no right putting in their two cents' worth when they do not walk in my shoes!!
My heart goes to you and everyone who is going through this. As I read in one comment....this behavior is not your Mother but is the disease process! Blessings